Stand by Your Man?


Stand by Your Man?

With Laura Bush's announcement that she supports marriage equality, she joins a list of political wives, including Elizabeth Edwards and Cindy McCain, who differ from their husbands on gay rights.

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Laura Bush has hinted in previous interviews that she’s more supportive of gay rights than her husband, but Tuesday she made it official when she told Larry King she supports marriage equality.

The former first lady isn’t the first political spouse to differ from her husband on gay issues. From Elizabeth Edwards to Cindy McCain, take a look at a few other political wives who have distanced themselves from their husbands when it comes to equal rights.

Teresa Heinz Kerry — In 2004, while supporting her husband’s presidential campaign at a stop in San Francisco, Heinz Kerry said with time, Americans would support marriage equality. She said her support of equal rights came from the perspective of a mother who had watched many friends come to terms with children who are gay. Though both she and her husband vocally opposed the Bush-sponsored Federal Marriage Amendment, John Kerry supported civil unions but said he did not support same-sex marriage.

Cindy McCain — In January 2010, more than a year after her husband, John McCain, lost the 2008 presidential race, Cindy McCain posed for the No H8 Campaign, declaring her support for marriage equality. In posing for the campaign, Cindy aligned her thoughts with those of her daughter Meghan — and directly opposed those of her husband, who doesn’t support marriage equality and is currently opposing the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

Elizabeth Edwards — Elizabeth Edwards made it clear in June 2007 that she supports same-sex marriage — six months after her husband, John Edwards, announced his candidacy for president in the 2008 election. “I don’t know why someone else’s marriage has anything to do with me,” Elizabeth Edwards said at a news conference before the San Francisco pride parade. “I’m completely comfortable with gay marriage.” She said her position put her at odds with her husband, who himself had admitted to being “conflicted” on the issue. John Edwards supported civil unions during his campaign but not marriage equality.

Hillary Clinton — Former first lady Hillary Clinton first made an effort to oppose the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy enacted under her husband Bill Clinton’s administration in her 2003 autobiography, Living History, calling it a terrible “compromise.” She’s since become one of the most vocal supporters of repealing the military’s gay ban and taken an active role in the effort to end violence against gays and lesbians around the globe. 


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